Talk:J. C. Williamson

Latest comment: 7 years ago by InternetArchiveBot in topic External links modified

Untitled edit

The J. C. Williamson company was an extremely important theatrical production company for 100 years in Australasia, running sometimes several touring companies at once. This article mostly discusses the G&S aspects of Williamson, but its activities in presenting operetta, musicals and other theatre were extensive and deserve either their own article, or a major expansion of this article. Come on, Australians and theatre lovers, won't someone do the research to add in the Non-G&S side of this famous company? -- Ssilvers 01:22, 4 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

I agree 100%. I have just finished an article on Tittell Brune, and thought that nobody had tackled JC Williamson. I started on him, then I found you'd done him, well sort of. I do feel that his G & S association is just one of his arms, and I do know that it helped start his career in Oz, but that it should either be treated as a sub heading, or dealt with separately. But if this article is left as is, it should have a different heading, not J.C. Williamson, and some of the non G&S detail should be deleted. And we can start fresh on JC beginning wih his beginning. Here's just a taste of his beginnings as a performer and comedian:
WILLIAMSON, JAMES CASSIUS (1845-1913), actor and theatrical manager, was born on 26 August 1845 in Mercer, Pennsylvania, son of a doctor, James Hezlep Williamson MD, and his wife Selina. About 1856 the family moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where young James made a clandestine theatrical début in 1857. In 1861 he worked for a theatre company as call-boy, general assistant and scenery and props maker; next year he joined the Royal Lyceum Theatre in Toronto, and then moved on to New York where he found work as a dialect comedian. In 1871 he moved to San Francisco and met comedienne Margaret Virginia Sullivan, whom he married at St Mary's Cathedral on 2 February 1873. On 23 February they starred in Struck Oil, a sketchy script bought for $100 and rewritten by his friend Clay Greene, and performed in Salt Lake City, Utah. The Williamsons then visited Australia. . . . . . . .
What do you think is the solution, merge and adjust, or you fix yours with a different heading, and we, or just you (your encyclopedic research is better than mine), start over on JC with just a nod to your excellent JC & G&S coverage? JohnClarknew 06:59, 20 November 2006 (UTC)

I added your new info into the article. Thanks! I then did a little research and added some more. This link provides some more info to work with: Article about formation of the J. C. Williamson companies. Meanwhile, we may as well leave the article all together like this until we have more non-G&S Williamson info. I'm not sure if we will need to separate out the G&S stuff. It depends how long the article gets.... -- Ssilvers 15:30, 20 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

Looking good! He sure was an interesting guy. Missing now is a nice picture at the top right. I happened to be in Sydney in late 1980's, and trying to track down Roy Redgrave, I spoke on the telephone with a very old lady in an old actors' home who had toured with him, for Williamson. I got as far as making a connection between Roy and Weir, his wife, and then she refused to discuss it further, maybe DNA problems were in the air. I got the impression that JC had trouble with his women, and that's why he left the country with her at the end. Good luck with your research. JohnClarknew 18:22, 20 November 2006 (UTC)

New External Link added edit

I moderate the Culture Victoria website and have added an external link to video, images and text about a 1920s Williamson scenebook and 19th & 20th century costume designs.Eleworth (talk) 00:19, 18 August 2010 (UTC)Reply

External links modified edit

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